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Kobayashi wins Totoumi Open

Kobayashi wins Totoumi Open

HAMAMATSU, Japan - Masanori Kobayashi earns his first career JGTO Tour victory with a birdie on the second playoff hole against Ryo Ishikawa at the inaugural Totoumi Hamamatsu Open at Grandee Hamanako Golf Club in Shizuoka Prefecture on May 22, 2011.

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Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (C), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks.

  •  
Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki, professor at Future University Hakodate, waves from the podium after jointly receiving the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds for determining optimal routes for railroad tracks.

  •  
Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (L), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks.

  •  
Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (2nd from L), associate professor at Hokkaido University, Ryo Kobayashi (2nd from R), professor at Hiroshima University, and Atsushi Tero (L), a researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, pose after they were awarded the Ig Nobel Prize for Cognitive Science at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 2. They discovered that a unicellular amoeboid organism can work out the shortest distance in a maze.

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Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Haruma Miura, Ryo Kimura, Gaku Hamada & Naoto Takenaka Characters: Taiyo Sasaki,Seito Kobayashi,Kosuke Taguchi & Duke Kawahara Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Haruma Miura, Ryo Kimura, Gaku Hamada & Naoto Takenaka Characters: Taiyo Sasaki,Seito Kobayashi,Kosuke Taguchi & Duke Kawahara Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Gaku Hamada, Haruma Miura & Ryo Kimura Characters: Kosuke Taguchi,Taiyo Sasaki & Seito Kobayashi Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Naoto Takenaka, Ryo Kimura, Haruma Miura & Gaku Hamada Characters: Duke Kawahara,Seito Kobayashi,Taiyo Sasaki & Kosuke Taguchi Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Gaku Hamada, Haruma Miura & Ryo Kimura Characters: Kosuke Taguchi,Taiyo Sasaki & Seito Kobayashi Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Catch A Wave (2006)

Catch A Wave (2006)

Ryo Kimura Characters: Seito Kobayashi Film: Catch A Wave (2006) Director: Nobuyuki Takahashi 29 April 2006 Date: 29 April 2006

  •  
Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

Japanese win Ig Nobel Prize for for Cognitive Science Prize

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (2nd from L), associate professor at Hokkaido University, Ryo Kobayashi (2nd from R), professor at Hiroshima University, and Atsushi Tero (L), a researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, pose after they were awarded the Ig Nobel Prize for Cognitive Science at Harvard University in Cambridge, Massachusetts, on Oct. 2. They discovered that a unicellular amoeboid organism can work out the shortest distance in a maze. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (C), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki, professor at Future University Hakodate, waves from the podium after jointly receiving the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds for determining optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

  •  
Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

Japanese among Ig Nobel winners

CAMBRIDGE, United States - Toshiyuki Nakagaki (L), professor at Future University Hakodate, jointly receives the Ig Nobel Prize at Harvard University's Sanders Theatre on Sept. 30, 2010, in Cambridge, Massachusetts. The professor, along with Atsushi Tero, researcher at the Japan Science and Technology Agency, and Ryo Kobayashi, professor at Hiroshima University, and two British scholars, won the prize for using slime molds to determine optimal routes for railroad tracks. (Kyodo)

  •  
Kobayashi wins Totoumi Open

Kobayashi wins Totoumi Open

HAMAMATSU, Japan - Masanori Kobayashi earns his first career JGTO Tour victory with a birdie on the second playoff hole against Ryo Ishikawa at the inaugural Totoumi Hamamatsu Open at Grandee Hamanako Golf Club in Shizuoka Prefecture on May 22, 2011. (Kyodo)

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